785 research outputs found
Isotope effect on the superfluid density in conventional and high-temperature superconductors
We investigate the isotope effect on the London penetration depth of a
superconductor which measures , the ratio of superfluid density to
effective mass. We use a simplified model of electrons weakly coupled to a
single phonon frequency , but assume that the energy gap
does not have any isotope effect. Nevertheless we find an isotope effect for
which is significant if is sufficiently large that it
becomes comparable to , a regime of interest to high cuprate
superconductors and possibly other families of unconventional superconductors
with relatively high . Our model is too simple to describe the cuprates
and it gives the wrong sign of the isotope effect when compared with
experiment, but it is a proof of principle that the isotope effect exists for
in materials where the pairing gap and is not of phonon origin
and has no isotope effect.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Transport phenomena in three-dimensional system close to the magnetic quantum critical point: The conserving approximation with the current vertex corrections
It is known that various transport coefficients strongly deviate from
conventional Fermi-liquid behaviors in many electron systems which are close to
antiferromagnetic (AF) quantum critical points (QCP). For example, Hall
coefficients and Nernst coefficients in three-dimensional heavy fermion CeCoIn5
and CeCu6-xAux increase strikingly at low temperatures, whose overall behaviors
are similar to those in high-Tc cuprates. These temperature dependences are too
strong to explain in terms of the relaxation time approximation. To elucidate
the origin of these anomalous transport phenomena in three-dimensional systems,
we study the current vertex corrections (CVC) based on the fluctuation exchange
(FLEX) approximation, and find out decisive role of the CVC. The main finding
of the present paper is that the Hall coefficient and the Nernst coefficient
strongly increase thanks to the CVC in the vicinity of the AF QCP, irrespective
of dimensionality. We also study the relaxation time of quasi-particles, and
find that "hot points" and "cold lines" are formed in general three-dimensional
systems due to strong AF fluctuations.Comment: 11 pages, 18 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Calculating critical temperatures of superconductivity from a renormalized Hamiltonian
It is shown that one can obtain quantitatively accurate values for the
superconducting critical temperature within a Hamiltonian framework. This is
possible if one uses a renormalized Hamiltonian that contains an attractive
electron-electron interaction and renormalized single particle energies. It can
be obtained by similarity renormalization or using flow equations for
Hamiltonians. We calculate the critical temperature as a function of the
coupling using the standard BCS-theory. For small coupling we rederive the
McMillan formula for Tc. We compare our results with Eliashberg theory and with
experimental data from various materials. The theoretical results agree with
the experimental data within 10%. Renormalization theory of Hamiltonians
provides a promising way to investigate electron-phonon interactions in
strongly correlated systems.Comment: 6 pages, LaTeX, using EuroPhys.sty, one eps figure included, accepted
for publication in Europhys. Let
The electron-phonon coupling strength at metal surfaces directly determined from the Helium atom scattering Debye-Waller factor
A new quantum-theoretical derivation of the elastic and inelastic scattering
probability of He atoms from a metal surface, where the energy and momentum
exchange with the phonon gas can only occur through the mediation of the
surface free-electron density, shows that the Debye-Waller exponent is directly
proportional to the electron-phonon mass coupling constant . The
comparison between the values of extracted from existing data on the
Debye-Waller factor for various metal surfaces and the values known
from literature indicates a substantial agreement, which opens the possibility
of directly extracting the electron-phonon coupling strength in quasi-2D
conducting systems from the temperature or incident energy dependence of the
elastic Helium atom scattering intensities.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl
Spin-triplet pairing instability of the spinon Fermi surface in a U(1) spin liquid
Recent experiments on the organic compound \kappa-(ET)_2Cu_2(CN)_3 have
provided a promising example of a two dimensional spin liquid state. This phase
is described by a two-dimensional spinon Fermi sea coupled to a U(1) gauge
field. We study Kohn-Luttinger-like pairing instabilities of the spinon Fermi
surface due to singular interaction processes with twice-the-Fermi-momentum
transfer. We find that under certain circumstances the pairing instability
occurs in odd-orbital-angular-momentum/spin-triplet channels. Implications to
experiments are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Temperature dependence of the superheating field for superconductors in the high-k London limit
We study the metastability of the superheated Meissner state in type II
superconductors with k >> 1 beyond Ginzburg-Landau theory, which is applicable
only in the vicinity of the critical temperature. Within Eilenberger's
semiclassical approximation, we use the local electrodynamic response of the
superconductor to derive a generalized thermodynamic potential valid at any
temperature. The stability analysis of this functional yields the temperature
dependence of the superheating field. Finally, we comment on the implications
of our results for superconducting cavities in particle accelerators.Comment: 7.5 pages, 2 figure
Sum Rules and Ward Identities in the Kondo Lattice
We derive a generalized Luttinger-Ward expression for the Free energy of a
many body system involving a constrained Hilbert space. In the large limit,
we are able to explicity write the entropy as a functional of the Green's
functions. Using this method we obtain a Luttinger sum rule for the Kondo
lattice. One of the fascinating aspects of the sum rule, is that it contains
two components, one describing the heavy electron Fermi surface, the other, a
sea of oppositely charged, spinless fermions. In the heavy electron state, this
sea of spinless fermions is completely filled and the electron Fermi surface
expands by one electron per unit cell to compensate the positively charged
background, forming a ``large'' Fermi surface. Arbitrarily weak magnetism
causes the spinless Fermi sea to annihilate with part of the Fermi sea of the
conduction electrons, leading to a small Fermi surface. Our results thus enable
us to show that the Fermi surface volume contracts from a large, to a small
volume at a quantum critical point. However, the sum rules also permit the
possible formation of a new phase, sandwiched between the antiferromagnet and
the heavy electron phase, where the charged spinless fermions develop a true
Fermi surface.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figures. Version two contains a proof of the "Entropy
formula" which connects the entropy directly to the Green's functions.
Version three contains corrections to typos and a more extensive discussion
of the physics at finite
The Complex Gap in Color Superconductivity
We solve the gap equation for color-superconducting quark matter in the 2SC
phase, including both the energy and the momentum dependence of the gap,
\phi=\phi(k_0,\vk). For that purpose a complex Ansatz for \phi is made. The
calculations are performed within an effective theory for cold and dense quark
matter. The solution of the complex gap equation is valid to subleading order
in the strong coupling constant g and in the limit of zero temperature. We find
that, for momenta sufficiently close to the Fermi surface and for small
energies, the dominant contribution to the imaginary part of arises from
Landau-damped magnetic gluons. Further away from the Fermi surface and for
larger energies the other gluon sectors have to be included into Im\phi. We
confirm that Im contributes a correction of order g to the prefactor of
\phi for on-shell quasiquarks sufficiently close to the Fermi surface, whereas
further away from the Fermi surface Im\phi and Re\phi are of the same order.
Finally, we discuss the relevance of Im\phi for the damping of quasiquark
excitations.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, 8 tables. Typos corrected, minor corrections to
the text. Accepted for publication in PR
Electron-Phonon Coupling in High-Temperature Cuprate Superconductors Determined from Electron Relaxation Rates
We determined electronic relaxation times via pump-probe optical spectroscopy
using sub-15 fs pulses for the normal state of two different cuprate
superconductors.We show that the primary relaxation process is the
electron-phonon interaction and extract a measure of its strength, the second
moment of the Eliashberg function\lambda=800\pm200 meV^{2} for
La_{1.85}Sr_{0.15}CuO_{4} and \lambda=400\pm100 meV^{2} for
YBa_{2}Cu_{3}O_{6.5}. These values suggest a possible fundamental role of the
electron-phonon interaction in the superconducting pairing mechanism.Comment: As published in PR
Phonon deficit effect and solid state refrigerators based on superconducting tunnel junctions
Thin film devices have the advantage of being extremely compact, operate in a
continuous mode, dissipate little power, and can easily be integrated in
cryogenic detectors. Motivated by such possibilities, we investigate the phonon
deficit effect in thin film (superconductor--insulator--superconductor)
and tunnel junctions. Under certain circumstances, the phonon absorption
spectra of such tunnel junctions have spectral windows of phonon
absorption/emission. We propose to use phonon filters to select the phonon
absorbtion windows and thus to enhance the cooling effect. Membranes attached
to such tunnel junctions can be cooled in this way more effectively. We discuss
a particular superlattice design of corresponding phonon filters.Comment: 8 pages 7 figure
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